“Widespread poverty, low educational attainment, high rates of community and interpersonal violence, high rates of alcohol-related deaths and suicide, poor physical health, and corroded family and community relationships.” (Shattered Hearts)

In the following video, Rose Henry, an Aboriginal community consultant from the Coast Salish territory, addresses why Aboriginal people are uniquely vulnerable to human trafficking in Canada.

Vulnerabilities of Aboriginal Peoples

In Canada, research has identified particular patterns in the way in which vulnerable Aboriginal women and girls are exploited:

According to Dr. Mark Totten, in research undertaken for the Native Women’s Association of Canada, “Sexual trafficking of Canadian Aboriginal girls and women is most common within the borders of Canada, particularly in the Prairie provinces. Trafficking networks are found in major cities (such as Vancouver, Winnipeg, Regina, Edmonton and Calgary) and in small towns in B.C. and the Prairies.

“There are patterns of city triangles across provinces (for example, Saskatoon-Edmonton-Calgary-Saskatoon; and Calgary-Edmonton-Vancouver-Calgary). The oil rigs and mining businesses in Alberta have contributed to trafficking activity. When discarded or escaping, Aboriginal women end up in big city ‘hot spots’ such as Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, where they are at considerable risk of being victimized by severe violence and murder.”

“There are about 400 children and youth exploited on the streets of Winnipeg each year, 70-80% of which are of Aboriginal descent

The process of grooming and prepping Aboriginal children and youth for entry into the sex trade is a long process that begins in childhood

Most participants have a family history that involves residential schools and/or the child welfare system

Youth are more likely to work the street trade than the indoor trade, working most often in cars and trick pads

Predators are typically middle to upper class white males”

Unique Vulnerabilities

“The types of trafficking to which Aboriginal women and girls are subject because they are Aboriginal are the types associated with discrimination, racism, poverty and breakdown of community.” Anette Sikka, in Trafficking of Aboriginal Women and Girls in Canada.

Anupriya Sethi’s research concludes that “there are communities in the North wherein First Nations girls are sexually exploited and initiated into prostitution by their male and female relatives — brother, father, grandfather or an uncle…” and that “Another type of sex trafficking is organized (gang related) and sophisticated in the form of escort services, massage parlours or dancers.”

Sethi also concludes that “Coercion and deception are the underlying elements in the various methods that traffickers use to force Aboriginal girls into sex trafficking,” and that recruitment occurs over the Internet, at airports, schools, bars, by traffickers posing as boyfriends and by other girls who have “no choice but to agree to the wishes of the trafficker due to fear, or in some cases, to meet their survival needs.” By forcing them to hitchhike, the lack of transportation options in some smaller and more rural communities also makes young Aboriginal girls “vulnerable to sexual exploitation.”

Lack of transportation options in some smaller and more rural communities means young Aboriginal girls hitchhike more, which may make them vulnerable to sexual exploitation.

In the following video clip from the documentary Enslaved and Exploited: The Story of Sex Trafficking in Canada, Canadian experts, including Anupriya Sethi, discuss domestic trafficking of Aboriginal girls and women for the purpose of sexual exploitation.

Video clip from: Enslaved and Exploited: the Story of Sex Trafficking in Canada

Human Trafficking in the North

Human Trafficking happens everywhere in Canada, including Nunavut, the Northwest Territories, and the Yukon. Helen Roos, Chair of the Ottawa Coalition to End Human Trafficking and a researcher for human trafficking issues in Northern Canada, states:

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